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Last Updated June 10, 2024

Program Overview

Category:

Regulatory Policy

State:

West Virginia

Incentive Type:

Interconnection

Administrator:

N/A

Start Date:

N/A

Expiration Date:

N/A

Web Site:

N/A

Applicable Sectors:

N/A

Eligible Renewable/Other Technologies:

N/A

Summary

In 2006, West Virginia stakeholders came together to consider net metering, interconnection as required by the Federal Energy Policy Act (2005) and agreed upon a "Statement of Consensus Among Parties," which was presented to and accepted by the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC) in December 2006. The consensus agreement did include interconnection guidelines for the state, however, the PSC did not initiate a formal rule-making or incorporate the guidelines into agency rules. Rather, the interconnection guidelines were incorporated into utility net metering tariffs (which are proposed by the utilities). In 2010, the PSC opened a docket to reconsider net metering and interconnection per H.B. 103 (2009). The Order, General Order No. 258, adopted new interconnection standards (Rules Governing Electric Utility Net Metering Arrangements and Interconnections), based almost entirely on the existing interconnection guidelines of the consensus agreement. However, several important improvements were incorporated, including tiered insurance requirements and removing the requirement for external disconnect switches in the case of smaller, inverter-based systems.

West Virginia adopted revised interconnection standards in 2019, increasing the system size for Level 1 review from 10 kW to 25 kW.

West Virginia's interconnection standards include two levels of review. The qualifications and application fees for each level are as follows:
  • Level 1 applies to generators with a rated capacity of 25 kW or less. The maximum application fee for Level 1 applicants is $30.
  • Level 2 applies to generators with a capacity of 2 MVA or less that do not meet the criteria for inclusion in Level 1. The maximum application fee is $50 plus $1 per kW of capacity.

The rules use IEEE 1547 as the technical standard of evaluation. The rules specify the technical screens which may be applied to applications at each level of review as well as time limits for different stages of the evaluation process. Application forms and interconnection agreements are standardized.

Customer-generators must maintain $100,000 general liability for systems with nameplate capacity of 50 kW or less, $500,000 for systems with nameplate capacity of greater than 50 kW to 500 kW, and $1 million for systems with nameplate capacity greater than 500 kW. Utilities may not require customers to install an external disconnect switch for inverter-based, certified systems 25 kW or less.